[Medieval People by Eileen Edna Power]@TWC D-Link book
Medieval People

CHAPTER IV
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What are we to think, for instance, of that giddy nun 'who on Monday night did pass the night with the Austin friars at Northampton and did dance and play the lute with them in the same place until midnight, and on the night following she passed the night with the Friars' preachers at Northampton, luting and dancing in like manner' ?[21] Chaucer told us how the friar loved harping and how his eyes twinkled like stars in his head when he sang, but failed perhaps to observe that he had lured Madame Eglentyne into a dance.
It is indeed difficult to see what 'legitimate' excuses the nuns can have made for all their wandering about in the streets and the fields and in and out of people's houses, and it is sorely to be feared that either they were too much of a handful for Madame Eglentyne, or else she winked at their doings.

For somehow or other one suspects that she had no great opinion of bishops.

After all Chaucer would never have met her, if she had not managed to circumvent her own, since if there was one excuse for wandering of which the bishops thoroughly disapproved, it was precisely the excuse of pilgrimages.

Madame Eglentyne was not quite as simple and coy as she looked.

How many of the literary critics, who chuckle over her, know that she never ought to have got into the Prologue at all?
The Church was quite clear in its mind that pilgrimages for nuns were to be discouraged.


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